* The summary of this report is being circulated in all official languages. The report itself,which is annexed to this document, is being reproduced in the language of submission
(French) and translated into English and Spanish.

** The reason for the late submission of this report is to reflect the latest information.

Summary

From 26 June to 2 July 2004, the Special Rapporteur visited Guatemala as part of a
mission to the Central American region that also took him to Honduras and Nicaragua (see E/CN.4/2005/18/Add.5 and Add.6). He visited the country at the invitation of the
Government of Guatemala and in pursuance of his mandate. The regional mission was
prompted by the need for the Special Rapporteur to help to shed light on two particularly
significant factors in the problem of racism: (1) the depth of the historical legacy of racism
and racial discrimination, the ideological underpinning of the slave-holding and colonial
systems, which has had a deep influence on the structure of societies in the region; and
(2) the impact of the political violence that has marked the recent history of Central
America on communities of indigenous people and people of African descent, which have
historically experienced discrimination. The three countries have similar ethnic and
demographic features and common historical and political legacies and, as countries in
transition towards peace-building, social cohesion and the consolidation of democracy, are
of particular interest with respect to the structuring and management of ethnic, racial and
cultural pluralism.

The Special Rapporteur observed three trends in all three countries that reveal the existence of deeply rooted discrimination: (1) a troubling correlation between poverty-stricken areas and areas inhabited by communities of indigenous people and people of
African descent; (2) the marginal involvement of representatives of those communities in
power structures - the government, parliament and the judiciary - as well as their
insignificant presence in decision-making positions in the media; and (3) their treatment
in the media as objects of folklore. He also found, to varying degrees in the three countries,
a lack of awareness of how extensive and deeply rooted discrimination is, among both the
political authorities and the population as a whole. The Special Rapporteur notes, by
contrast, statements by civil society actors he spoke with, as well as testimony from
members and representatives of all the peoples and communities concerned, that the
societies in Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua remain deeply imbued with racial
prejudice and discriminatory practices against such peoples and communities. Their
situation is a legacy of the colonial conquest and the slave-holding system, which, by
subjugating these peoples and communities and belittling their identities and cultures on
the basis of an openly racist ideology, have effectively marginalized them in a lasting way
at the political, social, economic and cultural levels. Despite principled claims of being
multicultural, the Hispanic legacy and identity of these countries are highlighted to the
detriment of the legacies of indigenous peoples or people of African and indigenous
descent, which are reduced to folklore. The rejection of the reality of ethnic pluralism, in
political, cultural and social terms, is particularly evident in everyday life through
discriminatory acts such as frequent denial of access to public places. Denying people the
opportunity to express their identities is one of the most telling forms of discrimination. The
inadequacy of public services (education, health and justice in particular) in areas
inhabited by these communities and the absence of genuine bilingualism are objective
demonstrations of the lack of social and cultural integration of these peoples and
communities. Thus, indicators of health, education and housing for these peoples and
communities remain lower than for the rest of the population.

In Guatemala, the Special Rapporteur found that the process of strengthening democracy and peace-building begun nearly 10 years ago following the signing of the peace
agreements has progressed considerably, particularly with regard to legislation and the
institutional protection of human rights. The Criminal Code has been amended to include
provisions banning racial discrimination, and the country has established two important
commissions, the Presidential Human Rights Commission and the Presidential
Commission on Discrimination and Racism against Indigenous Peoples. A human rights
procurator and an institution designed to support, defend and promote the human rights
of indigenous women (the Office for the Defence of Indigenous Women) complete the
institutional framework. The judicial system has also undertaken reforms to free itself from
the sway of the other branches of power, draw closer to the people and break the cycle of
impunity that has long characterized certain actions by the State, as well as by individuals.

The Government has committed itself to the implementation of the peace agreements,
where the resolution of the question of ethnicity remains an essential dimension. The Vice-President of the Republic, with whom the Special Rapporteur met, said that he was aware of the persistence of racial discrimination in Guatemalan society, a phenomenon reduced
by most political authorities with whom the Special Rapporteur met to economic and social discrimination alone. The Government has expressed its willingness to conduct political, economic and social reforms to enable indigenous peoples to participate at all levels.
Special efforts are reportedly being contemplated to encourage public officials to be more
sensitive to the cultural diversity of the country and adopt a multicultural perspective and
non-discriminatory attitudes in their relations with citizens. Unlike the previous
Government, the current administration has stated its readiness to implement the
provisions of the peace agreements relating to indigenous peoples, including with respect
to bilingual education, the provision of health services and access to justice in the
languages of the peoples concerned. Efforts will also be made to give greater
consideration to customary law in the settlement of disputes involving members of
indigenous peoples. The Special Rapporteur recommended in particular that the
Government of Guatemala should acknowledge at the highest level the persistence of
racism and discrimination against peoples and communities of indigenous people and
people of African descent and evaluate their forms, manifestations and impact at the
economic, social and cultural levels. He also recommended that a national plan to combat
racism and racial discrimination should be developed in a democratic manner on the basis
of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action. The campaign against racial
discrimination should be combined with the building of an authentically multicultural society
promoting both the expression of specific cultures and identities and interaction between
the members of the various peoples and communities and knowledge of and respect for
one another. He further recommended that all organizations of the United Nations system
present in Guatemala should grant an important place in their mandates to the struggle
against racism, discrimination and xenophobia by promoting policies and programmes to
that end.

Annex

REPORT OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON CONTEMPORARY FORMS OF RACISM, RACIAL DISCRIMINATION, XENOPHOBIA AND RELATED INTOLERANCE, MR. DOUDOU DIÈNE, ON HIS MISSION TO GUATEMALA (26 JUNE TO 2 JULY 2004)

1. During his visit to Guatemala, from 28 June to 2 July 2004, the Special Rapporteur met with several of the country's officials, including the Vice-President, Mr. Eduardo Stein, and
the Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs, Ms. Marta Altolaguirre Larraondo. He also met with representatives of the Presidential Commission for Coordinating Executive Policy in the
field of Human Rights (the Presidential Human Rights Commission in short, or
COPREDEH), the Presidential Commission on Discrimination and Racism against
Indigenous Peoples (CODISRA), the Office of the Human Rights Procurator and the Office
for the Defence of Indigenous Women, as well as with Ms. Rigoberta Menchú Tum, a
winner of the Nobel Peace Prize and goodwill ambassador for the peace agreements. In
his desire to learn more about Guatemalan society in all its complexity and diversity, the
Special Rapporteur also met with representatives of the Mayan, Xinca and Garifuna |1|
peoples and with representatives of civil society, religious communities, intellectual circles
and the media. His consultations took place in the capital, Guatemala City, and elsewhere in the country, including in the city of Quezaltenango in the north-west, the administrative
centre of the department of the same name, where a majority of the people are indigenous,
and in the town of Livingston in the south, on the Caribbean coast in the department of
Izabal, where the Garifuna and Maya-Quiché peoples live side by side.

2. The visit to Guatemala took place against a backdrop of the consolidation of the peace process. Government action, supported by the United Nations Mission for the Verification
of Human Rights and of Compliance with the Commitments of the Comprehensive
Agreement on Human Rights in Guatemala (MINUGUA), seems to have laid the
institutional and legislative groundwork for a solution to the economic, social, political,
cultural, ethnic and racial conflicts in the country. The departure of MINUGUA in December
2004 was a staging post along the way to completing the complex and long-term work of
gradually implementing the institutional, political, economic and social changes needed for
peace to take root. The efforts of the field office of the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights in Guatemala to encourage the emergence of a human
rights culture, combined with the activities of various specialized agencies of the United
Nations in the field of peace and social and human development, especially those of the
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), link up with the groundwork that has
been laid and that is being built on with a view to giving effect, through an updated system
of governance and pluralist democracy, to the commitments entered into by the various
protagonists and enshrined in the peace agreements. The Special Rapporteur believes
that the fragility of the peace-building process, the continued violations of human rights
and the marginalization of groups that suffer from discrimination as a result of weak legal protection would justify the rapid return to Guatemala of the field office of the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

3. Most of the people from both the Government and civil society with whom the Special Rapporteur met welcomed his visit and thought that it was taking place at a particularly
crucial time, when the parts of the peace agreements relating to human rights in general
and the identity and human rights of indigenous peoples and people of African descent in
particular were in need of a boost. The Special Rapporteur would like his visit to be seen
as a critical, forward-looking contribution to the implementation of the agreements,
particularly with regard to racism and discrimination.

4. The Special Rapporteur would like to thank the Government of Guatemala for its
cooperation and for the willingness of its representatives to make themselves available.
He is also grateful to the representatives of the Presidential Human Rights Commission
and the Presidential Commission on Discrimination and Racism against Indigenous
Peoples for the very useful information they gave him. He would like to express his
gratitude to Ms. Birgit Gerstenberg, the head of the field office of the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in Guatemala, and to her team for their
excellent work in organizing and coordinating his visit; to Mr. Juan Pablo Corlazzoli, the
United Nations resident coordinator in Guatemala, for logistical support and his substantial
contribution to the success of the mission, and particularly for organizing a meeting with
the United Nations country team in Guatemala; and to Mr. Tom Koenig, the representative
of the Secretary-General and head of MINUGUA, for the information he supplied and for
the logistical support of MINUGUA. Lastly, he would like to thank the regional officials he
met in Quezaltenango and Livingston, as well as the representatives of civil society he
talked to, including the representatives of the indigenous and Garifuna communities.

5. Guatemala covers an area of 180,889 km2. A country of social contrasts and cultural
diversity, it has a population of 11,237,196 inhabitants,|2| of whom 50 per cent are female. Four groups give the country its ethnic and racial diversity: the Maya, Ladinos,
Garifuna/Garinagu|3| and Xinca. The Maya and Ladinos form the largest groups. Some 41
per cent of the population identifies itself as indigenous, and 59 per cent as non-indigenous: 39.3 per cent is of Mayan origin (4,411,964) and 0.2 per cent of Xinca or
Garifuna origin (16,214 and 5,040 respectively).

6. It should be pointed out that it is little more that eight years since peace was established in Guatemala, following the signature on 29 December 1996 of the peace agreements
between the Government and the insurgents - the Unidad Revolucionaria Nacional
Guatemalteca (URNG) - which put an end to the conflict that had been affecting the
country since 1960. Guatemala is thus engaged in a process of profound political change
aimed at ensuring the effective participation of all parts of the nation and thus giving the
provisions of the peace agreements a chance to become firmly established. The
consolidation of democracy and reconciliation in preparation for the establishment of the
rule of law remains one of the challenges in this process. The years of conflict have left
Guatemalan society with a legacy of resentment and a culture of violence that give rise to
injustice and to authoritarian, antisocial and predatory behaviour. Observers agree that the
human rights situation has worsened, particularly because of the activities of the illegal and
violent groups that continue to kidnap and murder people. As highlighted in several reports
by MINUGUA, the denial of the right to justice is one of the most common human rights
violations.|4| Moreover, the new national civil police force sometimes acts outside the law in an excessively violent manner.

7. However, some steps have been taken to remedy the situation. In July 2002, the 20
largest Guatemalan political parties adopted, at the initiative of UNDP, a multiparty national
agenda that aims to bring about political change and the implementation of the peace
agreements through ongoing dialogue. Many social forces are now committed to building
a society based on the values of reciprocity, respect for others, mutual responsibility and
fairness.

8. The 1985 Constitution recognizes Guatemala's ethnic diversity (art. 66), though without
actually affirming its multi-ethnic nature, as is done in the 1995 Agreement on Identity and
Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which stipulates that "the Guatemalan nation is multi-ethnic,
multicultural and multilingual in nature". Although the draft reform of the Constitution
proposed by Congress in 1999 that would have included this and other provisions was not
approved by the people,|5| successive governments since the adoption of the peace
agreements have recognized that the country's ethnic diversity is a fundamental
characteristic of the Guatemalan State and have endeavoured to promote multiculturalism.
In his inauguration speech, on 14 January 2004, President Oscar Berger recalled that
Guatemala is a country made up of various peoples and cultures that form the foundation
and core of its identity. He recognized indigenous peoples as a fundamental part of the
Guatemalan identity and said that it would be by recognizing its roots, overcoming its
divisions and accepting its diversity that Guatemala would be able to consolidate national
unity. The Vice-President, Mr. Eduardo Stein, with whom the Special Rapporteur met,
reaffirmed the Government's multi-ethnic, multicultural and multilingual vision of
Guatemala, while acknowledging the persistence of racial discrimination. The Special
Rapporteur was particularly impressed by the Vice-President's intellectual grasp of the
issues and by his availability and commitment.

9. In practical terms, the Government's acceptance of multiculturalism is reflected in its
efforts to develop multilingual educational curricula, with the support of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Under the auspices of the Department of Bilingual Intercultural Education, which was established in 1995, the
educational reform project instigated by the Ministry of Education in 2002 is intended to
integrate Mayan values, experience and knowledge into educational courses. The
development of multicultural and intercultural curricula is the outcome of efforts to adapt
the education system to national and local realities, and should help all Guatemalans to
identify with the ethnic, linguistic and cultural richness of their country.|6| The reform affects
both the methods chosen for the transmission of knowledge and teaching materials and
resources.

10. A number of teachers from primary and secondary schools are being trained in
multicultural education, and curricula are being revised with the help of education councils
consisting of teachers and representatives of civil society and the communities concerned.
The reforms should eventually replace the monolingual and monocultural education system
with one that produces culturally aware pupils with linguistic skills in both Spanish and
indigenous languages. The Educational Campaign against Discrimination Act, which was
adopted by Congress in 2002 (Decree No. 81-2002), requires the Ministry of Education to
set up programmes to eliminate ethnic and racial discrimination. The aim of the National
Languages Act adopted by Congress in 2003 (Decree No. 19-2003) is to grant official
status to the Mayan, Garifuna and Xinca languages and to promote respect for them and
their development.

11. Under the Agreement on Identity and Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which states that
all the languages spoken in Guatemala must be treated with respect and requires the State
to take steps to protect those languages and promote their development and use, a
commission was set up in 1997 to grant official status to indigenous languages. It identified
four regional languages spoken by over 300,000 people, 16 community-based languages
spoken by less than 300,000 people and two special languages.|7| After this, the Academy
of Mayan Languages was set up to guarantee the development and use of most of these
languages. The law establishing the Academy was adopted by Congress on 18 October
1990 (Decree No. 65-90).

12. It is important to highlight, in addition to the Government's efforts to strengthen social cohesion, the national campaign for an inter-ethnic dialogue under the slogan "Our
diversity is our strength", which was launched on 29 June 2004 at the initiative of the
Mesoamerican Regional Research Centre (CIRMA) to encourage intercultural interaction
between the different ethnic groups in Guatemala. The campaign will run from 2004 to
2006, and includes cultural events in the country's biggest cities, interactive exhibitions,
university debates and lectures. During his visit to Quezaltenango, the Special Rapporteur
attended the launch of the campaign, giving a talk on intercultural dialogue as a tool for
building multiculturalism. His intention was to demonstrate, by clarifying the concepts of
"diversity" and "dialogue and peace", the need to combine the campaign against racial
discrimination with the promotion of an egalitarian, interactive and democratic form of
multiculturalism based on the recognition and promotion of, and respect for, the
characteristics of cultural and religious identities and the promotion of interaction and the
construction of a pluralist national identity.

13. Moreover, the Special Rapporteur was told about the Government's commitment to an administrative reform process that will enable the authorities to provide multilingual
services for citizens. Efforts are being made to change the attitude of civil servants towards
indigenous groups. Furthermore, competent individuals will continue to be recruited from
these groups in order to ensure that indigenous people are represented within the civil
service.

14. The Special Rapporteur was kept fully informed about progress in the reform of the
judicial system.|8| Since 1998, a course on interculturalism has been introduced in the
curriculum for training justices of the peace. To ensure that the justice system reaches
every region in the different languages used in the country, 607 bilingual employees who
speak the languages of the Maya and Garifuna were trained between 2002 and 2003 and
assigned to 21 departments. They consist of 98 judges, 369 legal officials, 43 bilingual
interpreters and 97 administrative employees. A judicial commission on indigenous matters
and a subcommission set up to monitor and support the strengthening of the justice system
have undertaken a study on the issue of multiculturalism in the justice system. Several
workshops have been organized to raise awareness of multiculturalism among officials in
the justice system and representatives of indigenous communities and the Office for the
Defence of Indigenous Women. A study has also been carried out on the community courts
responsible for applying customary indigenous law. Under the auspices of the Supreme
Court and in cooperation with the Academy of Mayan Languages, the Public Prosecutor's
Office and UNDP are preparing a glossary of Mayan legal terms.

15. The Constitution affirms and recognizes the primacy of the human person as the
subject and object of State action, and the Comprehensive Agreement on Human Rights
of 29 March 1994 called on the Government to undertake a number of legislative and
institutional reforms to protect human rights in general and combat racial discrimination in
particular. Paragraph 2 of the Agreement stipulates that "the Government of the Republic
of Guatemala shall continue to encourage all those measures designed to promote and
perfect norms and mechanisms for the protection of human rights".

16. Of the laws that have been passed, the following are worth mentioning: the Civil
Service Act (Decree No. 1748), which prohibits discrimination of any kind in the recruitment
of civil servants; and the Labour Code (Decree No. 1441), which prohibits discrimination
in the private sector. The Judicial Service Act (Decree No. 41-99) severely punishes (with
an unpaid 20-day suspension) any judge who indulges in discriminatory acts in the course
of his or her duties. As regards the media, the Broadcasting Act (Decree No. 433) prohibits
the broadcasting of comments that are denigrating or insulting or that incite racial
discrimination.

17. The adoption on 17 October 2002 of Decree No. 57-2002, which introduced article 202
bis into the Criminal Code, marked a significant step forward in the provision of criminal
sanctions for discriminatory acts. This article describes discrimination as "any distinction,
exclusion, restriction or preference based on gender, race, ethnic origin, language, age,
religion, financial status, state of health, handicap, civil status or any other ground, reason
or circumstance with the intention of preventing or hindering a person, group of persons
or association from enjoying a legally established right, including a right established by
customary law or custom, in accordance with the Political Constitution of the Republic and
international human rights treaties". The punishments applicable for an act recognized as
discriminatory by a court of law are a prison term of one to three years and a fine of 500
to 3,000 quetzales. The punishment may be increased if the discrimination is based on
language, culture or ethnic origin. The law also forms the basis for the implementation of
the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination and
the International Labour Organization (ILO) Convention concerning Indigenous and Tribal
Peoples in Independent Countries (No. 169), which have been ratified by Guatemala.
However, this law needs to be backed up by another law with a broader scope that would
punish racial discrimination in all areas, including housing, access to health services,
education and access to any place or service intended for use by the general public
(transport, hotels, restaurants, cafes, theatres and parks), in accordance with article 5 of
the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.

18. At the institutional level, Guatemala has several bodies devoted to the promotion and protection of human rights. The most important are the Presidential Human Rights
Commission, the Presidential Commission on Discrimination and Racism against
Indigenous Peoples, the Office of the Human Rights Procurator and the Office for the
Defence of Indigenous Women.

19. The Presidential Human Rights Commission was established in 1991 to coordinate government policy on human rights. It supports the various ministries in formulating and
implementing measures to protect human rights and may submit to the Government draft
laws designed to improve the protection of human rights. It centralizes the collection of
data on complaints of human rights violations and maintains channels of communication
and cooperation with the judicial system and the Human Rights Procurator to follow up
such complaints. It is also responsible for coordinating the drafting of Guatemala's periodic
reports to the bodies monitoring the human rights treaties to which Guatemala is a party.
The Commission has seven regional offices, which bring it closer to the people.

20. The Presidential Commission on Discrimination and Racism against Indigenous
Peoples (CODISRA) is the prime institution for combating racial discrimination. It was
established in October 2002, and its task is to: advise and support the different State
institutions and departments and private-sector enterprises in drawing up policies and
setting up mechanisms to combat racial discrimination; formulate public policies
guaranteeing non-discrimination; act as a link between indigenous peoples' organizations
and the Government in matters of racial discrimination; keep a record of the cases of racial
discrimination brought to its attention and forward them to the relevant institutions; and
launch campaigns against racial discrimination. Although it is linked to the executive,
CODISRA is an offshoot of Guatemalan civil society, and is made up of representatives
of the Mayan, Xinca and Garifuna peoples. However, its members believe that its
effectiveness is limited by the shortage of funding, its statutory inability to rule on the cases
of discrimination referred to it and its inability to bring actions against the relevant State
bodies. They believe that a broadening of its mandate would give it greater credibility
among the population groups concerned.

21. The Office for the Defence of Indigenous Women, which was set up in 1999, is the
institution responsible for defending the human rights of indigenous women. Its main task
is to propose solutions to the problem of the extreme vulnerability of indigenous women
in Guatemalan society. It promotes and develops, in cooperation with governmental and
non-governmental bodies, action, public policy proposals, action plans and programmes
for the prevention and elimination of all forms of violence and discrimination against
women. The Office is also responsible for receiving complaints and reports of violations
of women's rights and forwarding them to the competent authorities, and for counselling
women who have been subjected to violence, ill-treatment, discrimination or sexual
harassment.

22. The Constitution also established the post of Human Rights Procurator (arts. 273-275),
who is a judge appointed by Congress to promote and ensure that the State respects
human rights, report and investigate State actions that violate human rights, respond to
individual complaints of human rights violations by investigating them and taking out
prosecutions, and recommend remedial measures to be taken by the authorities to ensure
respect for and the protection of human rights.

23. The Special Rapporteur noted that, despite the tasks allocated to these institutions,
combating racism and racial discrimination is not yet a national priority. Further efforts are
needed to encourage political action and solutions that, in conjunction with legal measures,
would strengthen the present system of protection. This would make it possible to avoid
purely theoretical reforms and, instead, to ensure the effectiveness of existing legislation
and improve the procedures for remedies, which are currently considered of little practical
use.

24. The Spanish Conquest and the subsequent period of colonization, which began in
Guatemala in 1524, left the country with a legacy of political, economic and social
stratification that basically persists to this day. Such stratification, which is based on racial
prejudice, kept indigenous groups at the bottom of the social ladder and reduced Africans
to slavery. The indigenous groups were considered as backward and as obstacles to
development, and were exterminated and marginalized, while their culture was devalued
and treated as a form of folklore. This situation illustrates the malaise affecting
Guatemalans' sense of identity, whereby the thriving cultural practices and expressions
of indigenous people are downplayed even as the architectural and archaeological legacy
of indigenous people, particularly the Maya, is put on display for the benefit of Guatemala's
image abroad. The achievement of independence and the construction of a modern State
have propagated, not to say exacerbated, this legacy of discrimination and marginalization.
In this connection, the Commission for Historical Clarification, which was set up to shed
light on human rights violations committed during the armed conflict, has stressed that one
of the causes of the armed conflict was "the creation of an authoritarian State which
excluded the majority of the population, was racist in its precepts and practices, and served
to protect the interests of the privileged minority".|9|

25. Despite official statements recognizing multiculturalism, Guatemala clearly and
overwhelmingly gives preference to its Hispanic identity. The country's official language
is still Spanish, and the 24 other national languages are for domestic use only. A large
proportion of the population - the Mayan population alone accounts for 43 per cent of it -
is therefore marginalized from the viewpoint of the State, the administration, the judiciary
and the economy. Despite the progress made in reforming the justice system, the Special
Rapporteur's attention was drawn to the fact that, out of a total of 650 judges, only 98, or
15.08 per cent, speak indigenous languages.|10|

26. Despite the deep historical roots of racial discrimination, its pervasiveness
incontemporary society and its clear daily manifestations, the Special Rapporteur
considers that there is no clear recognition of this reality by the political authorities and the
dominant classes. Although some government representatives recognize it in private, the
official line is that discrimination is essentially of a social and economic nature. The failure
to recognize the reality of racial discrimination and its pervasiveness throughout society
is thus a major initial obstacle to efforts to confront this problem directly and objectively and
find a lasting solution.

27. The Special Rapporteur finds that the Government's legal strategy and the institutional provisions introduced to combat racism and racial discrimination, while they do represent
some progress, are ambiguous, since the present institutions and mechanisms, because
of their links to the executive, do not have the independence they need to be effective, and
they lack democratic legitimacy. They also lack the financial resources needed for their
work.

28. The Special Rapporteur was particularly struck by the lack of an intellectual and ethical strategy to combat racism and discrimination. Neither the structure nor the content of
Guatemala's system of education has been subjected to deconstruction with a view to
analysing the history of racism, its origin, its mechanisms, its process, its expressions and
manifestations. History, for example, which is the workshop for the discriminatory and
racist construction of identities, does not appear to have been revisited, either in its written
form or in the way in which it is taught. The mirror of identity, reflected by the media,
ensures that indigenous people and people of African descent remain historically invisible
as part of the heritage of discrimination and racism. The system of dominant values
marginalizes the traditional cultural and spiritual values and practices of these groups. The
task of building a genuine form of multiculturalism that is egalitarian, interactive and
democratic therefore constitutes a major challenge for Guatemalan society.

29. The views expressed by the Presidential Human Rights Commission, the Presidential Commission on Discrimination and Racism against Indigenous Peoples and
representatives of indigenous peoples and communities all condemn the persistence of
racism and racial discrimination, notwithstanding the reforms under way and the current
legislation. According to the representatives of these institutions and communities, racism
continues to permeate mentalities and is reflected not only in personal relationships but
also in the way that politics, the economy, society, the judiciary and communications are
organized. The assessment by the United Nations country team reaches the same
conclusion, observing that:

30. "Guatemala remains a fragile State that is unable, through its public policies, to
overcome discrimination and ensure due respect for the country's ethnic diversity.
Discrimination is still evident in several areas of national life. It mainly affects indigenous
peoples, women, children, young persons and adults … Public investment has not been
targeted in such a way as to foster equal opportunities and development; on the contrary,
it encourages further racial and social discrimination. Public policies to eliminate poverty
and social exclusion have little impact and have not been able to close the gap between
rich and poor."|11|

31. Several of the individuals the Special Rapporteur talked to pointed out that several
attempts were made during the armed conflict to weaken the Mayan people and indeed to question whether they really are a people. The lives of members of this people and their
ability to reproduce were directly jeopardized by military action. Their living conditions and
their development were also jeopardized by subjecting them to economic hardship. In its
report, the Commission for Historical Clarification set up to shed light on human rights
violations committed during the armed conflict highlighted proven acts of genocide, which
were analysed on the basis of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide. It spoke of:

- "Massacres, followed by population displacements and the persecution and murder of survivors";

- "Targeted assassinations of community chiefs or leaders of Mayan organizations, and their enforced disappearance";

- "The murder of elders, women and children, which affected the transmission of the culture
and the possibility of cultural continuity in the communities".|12|

32. There are numerous cases of violations of the human rights of indigenous peoples
during the armed conflict which have not received sufficient attention from the justice
system, with the result that the guilty parties remain unpunished. The vast majority of these
peoples and communities are still waiting for compensation and reparation for all the
violations and hardships they suffered during the years of political violence. In contrast,
the Special Rapporteur was told by former members of the Civil Self-Defence Patrols
(Patrullas de Autodefensa Civil) who, together with members of the army, committed
atrocities against civilians during the 1980s, that they had been promised that they would
soon receive financial compensation from the Government.

33. Many of the situations brought to the Special Rapporteur's attention, including those concerning indigenous peoples' land rights and their cultural and spiritual identity, have
been reported previously by the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and
fundamental freedoms of indigenous people, in his report on his mission to Guatemala in
2001. There is no need to repeat them here, as there is no change to report.|13| The
problems over land illustrate the discrimination from which these people suffer. An example
would be the violence used in "clearing" the Nueva Linda estate, a huge property occupied
by a group of landless peasants; this "clearing" led to more than nine deaths, and does not
seem to have been dealt with seriously by the Government or the justice system, despite
several damning reports.

34. Racism in everyday life is reflected in scornful looks, jokes in bad taste, comments
about indigenous individuals and Mayan women's refusal to go into public places (such as
shops, restaurants or nightclubs) wearing traditional costume. The feeling that they are
marginalized and that their identity is not recognized was apparent in conversations with
several of them, who said the looks they receive from others make them feel "like
foreigners in their own country". Members of the Presidential Commission on
Discrimination and Racism against Indigenous Peoples stressed that racial discrimination
is generally suffered in silence by victims. Those who suffer from and those who practice
discrimination seem, by force of habit and out of a feeling that it is normal, to have become
so used to racist behaviour that it seems natural to them.

35. Government action to combat racism is seen by some sectors of the Ladino population as special treatment for indigenous peoples. The involvement of indigenous peoples in the decision-making process is generally limited to inviting their representatives to
consultations without taking into account their views in the final decision or including them
in political and economic decision-making bodies.

36. At the institutional level, of the 153 members of Congress, only 14 are of indigenous origin. Political parties balk at presenting candidates from indigenous communities. In the army, indigenous people make up the majority of the rank and file but a far smaller
proportion of officers (72.6 per cent of whom are Ladinos, as compared with 27 per cent
who are indigenous).|14| In the Government, individuals of indigenous origin generally
occupy posts below the rank of deputy minister and presidential secretary, and are rarely
appointed as ministers.

37. It was recognized that the peace agreements have not yet produced the structural
changes expected and that the Agreement on Identity and Rights of Indigenous Peoples
is the least used instrument, since the laws and reforms proposed generally remain
unimplemented for lack of resources and political will. Despite the judicial reforms under
way, many of the people who talked to the Special Rapporteur think that the justice system
is deficient and that indigenous customary law is not sufficiently integrated in the judicial
process. Thus, a judicial monism prevails and traditional indigenous authorities are not
considered capable of administering justice according to the practices and customs of their
communities, contrary to the relevant provisions of ILO Convention No. 169.

38. Several of the people the Special Rapporteur talked to stressed the persistence of the
traditionally inegalitarian structure of Guatemalan society, the legacy of a long history of
discrimination, social exclusion and marginalization. Those who suffer most as a result of this structure are people of indigenous and African origin at every level. According to
UNDP data, these people are becoming increasingly impoverished. In 2002, poverty in
general affected 57 per cent of the population, or 6.5 million people, and extreme poverty
21 per cent of the population, or 2.4 million people. The situation is particularly serious in
rural areas, where the majority of indigenous people live; 72 per cent of these people are
affected.|15|

39. The departments populated for the most part by indigenous communities have the
highest poverty levels.|16| Health and education indicators reveal the same disparities. The
departments with the highest levels of illiteracy are for the most part inhabited by
indigenous people. The illiteracy rates range from 41 per cent to 53 per cent: 53 per cent
in Quiché; 51.3 per cent in Alta Verapaz; 47.9 per cent in Sololá; 43.3 per cent in
Totonicapán; 41.9 per cent in Baja Verapaz; and 41.6 per cent in Huehuetenango - while
the national average is 31.7 per cent.|17| Poverty, lack of access to drinking water,
environmental degradation, cultural marginalization and the lack of sanitation facilities are
factors that have a negative impact on the health of indigenous people. Cultural barriers
are especially noticeable in the failure of officialdom and administrators to use indigenous
languages in health centres and the failure to incorporate traditional medicine in health
programmes. Pilot projects designed to integrate 4,560 midwives are only just beginning
to get under way, even though over 50 per cent of the population has recourse to the
services of traditional doctors or healers. The Special Rapporteur believes that the
correspondence between areas of poverty and social marginalization and the geographical
distribution of indigenous people or people of African origin shows the depth of systemic,
structural discrimination in Guatemala.

40. Representatives of the Garifuna claim that, despite the fact that they first landed on the shores of what is now Guatemala in 1806 and despite the fact that they are mentioned in
the Agreement on Identity and Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the Garifuna are not fully
recognized as Guatemalans and are discriminated against when they emigrate from the
Izabal region (Livingston) to the capital. Many of them have been harassed by the police,
who consider them as illegal foreign immigrants in Guatemala. In schools in the
department of Izabal, Garifuna children feel discriminated against because their language
is not used and they feel they are not receiving the same attention from teachers as Ladino
children. Moreover, the absence of their culture, history and traditions from school courses
makes these children feel marginalized. The lack of opportunities, which is related to the
lack of development projects in their region|18| and to the discrimination against them, has
forced many of them to emigrate, particularly to the United States of America, from where
they support the families they left behind. They are afraid that their community might lose
its language because there is no bilingual education for their children. In light of the
interest shown by tourists in their region, some of them say they are afraid they may be
forced out of Livingston in the same way as they were forced off the island of Saint Vincent
in 1796.

41. During a visit to a Garifuna couple living with HIV/AIDS, the Special Rapporteur was able to gauge the effects of the lack of adequate health facilities in the town of Livingston,
in the department of Izabal. The health centre in the town has neither the appropriate
drugs nor sufficient equipment to treat, for example, HIV-positive persons and AIDS
patients, who are obliged to go to Puerto Barrios, which is about an hour away by boat.
The trip requires financial resources that these individuals do not always have. In
Livingston, many sick people die for lack of adequate medical care. The lack of health care
shows a lack of commitment on the part of the Government towards the population groups
that suffer most from discrimination. For this reason, Guatemala has been denounced to
the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights by HIV/AIDS patients who have no
access to treatment.

42. Representatives of the Xinca people also stressed the specific forms of discrimination from which they suffer, which are related to the pressure exerted on them since colonial
times not to speak their language and to abandon their traditional costumes, as well as the
breakdown of their communities. They pointed out that the State dealt ruthlessly with Xinca
efforts to organize, rejected their customary law and expropriated their communities' land
for the benefit of big landowners, leaving the Xinca to be exploited as farm workers on
coffee plantations. Like other indigenous peoples, the Xinca were the victims of military
repression during the armed conflict and were marginalized economically and socially.
Although its members are still treated as if they were invisible, the Xinca people is starting
to rebuild itself, with the aim of recovering its cultural identity as a distinct people among
the other indigenous peoples. For example, Xinca organizations have begun to carry out
in-depth sociocultural and anthropological research into their people's practices and
customs. Their representatives claim that the situation of their communities in the villages
of Yupiltepeque, Jumaytepeque and Guazacapán requires urgent attention, as they have
been threatened with the expropriation of their land by the municipal authorities.

43. Indigenous children and women are among those who are most affected by racial
discrimination. Indigenous women, because of their ethnic origin and sex, suffer twice over from discrimination, which typically takes the form of a rejection of their traditional dress,
the denial of access to education, health care and basic public services (water and
electricity) and the lack of job opportunities and access to land. The illiteracy rate among
indigenous women is between 50 per cent and 90 per cent; only 43 per cent of them
complete their primary education, 5.8 per cent secondary education and 1 per cent higher
education.|19|

44. In the area of reproductive health, indigenous women mostly resort to the services of healers and give birth in hazardous conditions. The maternal mortality rate, which is
estimated at 74 per 100,000 live births in Guatemala, is one of the highest in Central
America, and is linked to the situation of indigenous women. In 2000, according to UNDP,
65.4 per cent of the cases of mortality related to childbirth concerned indigenous women.|20|

45. As far as children are concerned, the majority (62.3 per cent) of the 556,000 children aged between 7 and 14 who do not go to school are indigenous.|21| The rate of malnutrition among indigenous children is 29 per cent, as compared with 17.2 per cent among non-indigenous children; the infant mortality rates are, respectively, 69 and 52 per 1,000 live
births.

46. Several cases of racial discrimination described by the Human Rights Procurator
illustrate the form taken by discrimination both in personal relationships and within
institutions. For example, Ms. Rigoberta Menchú tried to sue members of the Frente
Republicano Guatemalteco political party for making allegedly racist remarks about her,
calling her a "market Indian" and a "tomato seller" and inviting her to "sell her vegetables
somewhere else"; a councillor from the town of Xela is being prosecuted for saying during
an interview that "during the conquest, the Spaniards exorcised the indigenous peoples";
a teacher of Mayan origin and her pupils were forced to identify themselves as Ladinos on
a form for the Ministry of Education; a pupil of Mayan origin was refused admission to a
private school because she was dressed in Mayan costume; and in 1996, racist graffiti
appeared on walls in the city of Quezaltenango, which was governed by an indigenous
person.

47. Racism and racial discrimination are deep-rooted, though not institutionalized, in
Guatemala. They are reflected in the pervasiveness of the centuries-old prejudices that have marked Guatemalan history, culture and mentalities and that have been amplified by
the tragic events of the country's recent past, culminating in a genocide of indigenous
peoples. Guatemala's economic and social situation is characterized by the non-egalitarian development of the so-called Ladino population and of indigenous peoples and people of African descent, illustrating the structural and systemic nature of discrimination. The lowest
economic and social development indicators are found in the regions populated mostly by
indigenous people and people of African descent. The correspondence between areas of
economic impoverishment and social marginalization and the geographical distribution of
indigenous groups is a glaring example of the systemic and structural nature of racial
discrimination. The Special Rapporteur therefore believes that combating racial
discrimination should be a cornerstone of the process of building peace and democracy
in Guatemala. A true and lasting peace cannot be reduced to its political and legal
dimensions, as formulated in the peace agreements and subsequent laws; if it is to be
achieved and to be really lasting, it must be based on efforts to eradicate racism and racial discrimination by taking appropriate measures while promoting reconciliation. The Special
Rapporteur therefore makes the following recommendations:

(a) Given the pervasiveness of racism and racial discrimination, the Special Rapporteur
believes that a bold political act is needed to demonstrate the Government's determination
to eliminate this evil. The President should make a solemn statement formally recognizing
the existence and the social, economic and cultural consequences of these phenomena
and should express the Government's commitment to eliminating them on a democratic
basis and with the participation of the indigenous peoples and people of African descent
concerned;

(b) Moreover, the Special Rapporteur recommends that the Government should go beyond
this formal recognition of the country's ethnic diversity by writing it into the Constitution, in
accordance with the Agreement on Identity and Rights of Indigenous Peoples;

(c) Having noted the lack of coordination between the institutions and government
departments responsible for combating racism, as well as the lack of financial resources
or the inadequate allocation of resources, the Special Rapporteur recommends that an
integrated approach should be taken to combating racism and racial discrimination, by
drawing up a national programme to combat racism and discrimination and simultaneously
promoting an egalitarian, interactive and democratic form of multiculturalism, with a view
to building a society based on ethnic and cultural pluralism that encourages dialogue and
interaction between all its members. Such a programme should be based on the Durban
Declaration and Programme of Action;

(d) The relevant provisions of the peace agreements, particularly the Agreement on Identity
and Rights of Indigenous Peoples, should be subjected to a critical evaluation to determine
their achievements and shortcomings. In this context, combating racism and racial
discrimination should be linked to the long-term promotion of multiculturalism based on the
principle of unity and diversity, the recognition and promotion of, and respect for, the
identity-related, ethnic, spiritual and cultural characteristics and peculiarities of all peoples
and communities, and the promotion of a process of interaction and cross-fertilization
between them all;

(e) Given the profound and long-lasting impact of racism and discrimination on the
structure of Guatemalan society, the Special Rapporteur recommends the adoption of a
programme of voluntary or affirmative action in favour of peoples who have historically
suffered from discrimination, that is, indigenous peoples and people of African descent;

(f) Special emphasis should be placed on the core issue of the construction of a pluralist
identity in Guatemala through the promotion of multicultural and intercultural education that
pays special attention to the way history is written and taught, to the system of values and
to the development of genuine multilingualism in all walks of life. In this context, special
attention should be paid to two central dimensions of national identity: the promotion of
multiculturalism in the media, both in their output and in their management and operational
structure; and the dynamic national culture resulting from the promotion of the country's
architectural and historical heritage and the development of the creativity and thriving
cultural practices of all its peoples and communities. The development of adequately-resourced local, community-based, free media should be part of these efforts;

(g) The process of catharsis initiated by the Commission for Historical Clarification set up
to shed light on past human rights violations should be pursued in order to expunge the
painful experience of discrimination and put an end to the impunity enjoyed by those
responsible for the political violence; the Commission's recommendations with regard to
preserving the memory of the victims of the armed conflict, moral and material redress for
victims or their families, and the establishment of a mental-health programme for those
traumatized by the armed conflict should be implemented quickly;

(h) The Presidential Commission on Discrimination and Racism against Indigenous
Peoples and the Presidential Human Rights Commission should be linked by law to Congress to make them statutorily independent, in accordance with the Principles relating to the Status of National Institutions (the Paris Principles); similarly, these
commissions should be given their own financial resources under the annual State budget;

(i) The Special Rapporteur encourages Congress to speed up the process of adopting the
law that will authorize the Government to make the declaration recognizing the
competence of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination under article 14
of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination;

(j) It is recommended that non-governmental organizations should take an active part in
drawing up and implementing a national programme to combat racism and racial
discrimination, by making proposals to eliminate racism and racial discrimination, with the
focus on resolving communities' specific problems; in the process, these organizations
should work together to help build a more mutually supportive and democratic society.

48. Efforts to combat racism and racial discrimination should take into account the regional
dimension in Central America, where the societies share not only demographic, ethnic and
cultural similarities, but above all a historical heritage of racism and discrimination,
amplified by present-day political violence. The countries of this region are also
characterized by movements of population groups which are victims of discriminatory
practices to various degrees in the different countries. The Special Rapporteur
consequently recommends that the Organization of American States (OAS), and in
particular the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, should assign a central role in peace-building to the thoroughgoing eradication of racism and racial discrimination with
a view to building democratic, egalitarian and interactive multiculturalism in the region.
OAS should support the efforts of the Central American States by means of studies on the
shaping of multi-ethnic identities and their manifestations, as well as assistance in the
drafting of coordinated domestic and regional legislation, the strengthening of institutions
for the protection of human rights and civil society, and the revision of educational and
media programmes and systems.

49. OAS should also promote intercultural tourism centred on the following elements: the
existence of a shared geographical and historical heritage, the vitality of authentic cultural
and spiritual practices and forms of expression and their profound interactions in time and
space. Intercultural tourism can make it possible to combat discrimination through the
rehabilitation of identities that have historically been denied or scorned, to check the
tendency inherent in modern mass tourism to treat culture as folklore, and to foster the
fundamental link between land and culture, and land and origins, which lies at the heart
of the demands made by indigenous peoples and communities and people of African
descent.

This document has been published on 30Jun05 by the Equipo Nizkor and Derechos Human Rights. In accordance with
Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a
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